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Academic & Professional Books  Natural History  General Natural History

Daybooks of Discovery Nature Diaries in Britain, 1770-1870

By: Mary Ellen Bellanca
286 pages, no illustrations
Daybooks of Discovery
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  • Daybooks of Discovery ISBN: 9780813926131 Paperback May 2007 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 1-2 weeks
    £21.95
    #166841
  • Daybooks of Discovery ISBN: 9780813926124 Hardback May 2007 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 1-2 weeks
    £55.99
    #166840
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About this book

Rooted in a thriving culture of amateur natural history, the keeping of nature journals and diaries flourished in late-eighteenth-and early-nineteenth-century Britain. As prescientific worldviews ceded to a more materialist outlook informed by an explosion of factual knowledge, lovers of nature both famous and obscure began to use daily composition as a quest for information about and a celebration of their surroundings. A central site of encounter, discovery, and expression, nature diaries took part in a vigorous cultural dialogue, performing, in an era called the "golden age" of nature writing, an engaging alchemy of language, science, and art.

In "Daybooks of Discovery: Nature Diaries in Britain, 1770-1870", Mary Ellen Bellanca offers the first critical study of this genre. In looking at the diaries of Gilbert White, Dorothy Wordsworth, Emily Shore, George Eliot, and Gerard Manley Hopkins, as well as those of lesser-known figures, she explores the writers' pursuit of empirical knowledge of nature for its own sake, rather than focusing on Romantic nature philosophy or on 'ecology' as a metaphor for spiritual connectedness.

Each chapter situates an individual author's journals amid contemporary discourses of natural history, examining how journal writing enabled and mediated the diarist's practice as naturalist. A melange of fact, narrative, and imaginative re-creation, the nature diary played a crucial role in literature and science in a period of burgeoning knowledge about the natural world.

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Biography

Mary Ellen Bellanca is Assistant Professor of English at the University of South Carolina Sumter.
By: Mary Ellen Bellanca
286 pages, no illustrations
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